The big picture: The environment influences populations





  • Review: What is a population?


  • Biotic and abiotic factors affect population dynamics
    • abundance, dispersion & age structure


  • Population growth can be ‘modeled’
    • tracking births & deaths


  • Density (#/area) matters
    • crowdedness impacts population growth

Populations often described by their boundaries


Measuring population size and density




  • May be possible to count all individuals
    • large mammals, animals in small habitats


  • More often impractical or impossible to count all individuals
    • indirect estimates are needed
    • dusk deer surveys in Biol 303


  • Population size and Density is not static
    • migration in and out of populations
    • births & deaths
    • motility

Densities vary within a population


The density of these populations is the same but their ecology differs

Tracking population trends through time (demography)

Patterns of survivorship in natural populations


Populations grow fast when resources are abundant


Can we predict changes in population size?



  • Start with ideal conditions:
    • few individuals to start
    • non-limiting environment


  • Population ↑ with births & immigration


  • Population ↓ with deaths & emigration


  • Balance of births & deaths at any given time
    • per capita change (r) =

Elephants in Kruger National Park (Exponential Growth)


Resources rarely remain non-limiting




  • Carrying capacity (K):
    • as population increases, resources diminish


  • Resources that limit are vast
    • food, shelter, safety, nesting sites


  • Resource limitation causes birth rate to decline


  • Logistic growth =

Trade offs exists between survival and reproduction





  • Frequency of reproduction
  • Number of offspring
  • Investment into parental care


Combined there traits represents an organism’s life history

  1. Age at first reproduction
  2. How often reproduction occurs
  3. How many offspring are created

Trade offs exists between reproduction and survival





  • Frequency of reproduction
  • Number of offspring
  • Investment into parental care


Combined there traits represents an organism’s life history

  1. Age at first reproduction
  2. How often reproduction occurs
  3. How many offspring are created

Trade offs exists between survival and reproduction





  • Frequency of reproduction
  • Number of offspring
  • Investment into parental care


Combined these traits represents an organism’s life history

  1. Age at first reproduction
  2. How often reproduction occurs
  3. How many offspring are created

Trade-offs and Life Histories


Density in populations matter (carrying capacity)





  • Why do populations stop growing?


  • Density dependent factors = crowdedness
    • resources, predator-prey
    • disease, waste becomes toxic


  • Population density works as a negative feedback for predator-prey populations

What factors are density independent?


Patterns in human population


Patterns in human population: Age structure


Patterns in human population: Density and carrying capacity